In force Feb.[February] 27, 1841.
An ACT to incorporate the Nauvoo Agricultural and Manufacturing Association, in the county of Hancock.
1
Name and style
Sec.[Section] 1. Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, represented in the General Assembly, That Sidney Rigdon, George W. Robinson, Samuel James, Wilson Larr, Daniel H. Wells, Hyram Smith, George Miller, William Marks, Peter Haws, Vinson Knight, John Scott, Don C. Smith, William Huntington, senior, Ebenezer Robinson, R B. Thompson, William Law, James Alred, John T. Barnett, , John C. Bennett, Elias Higbee, Isaac Higbee, Joseph Smith, A. Cutter, Israel Barlow, R. D. Foster, John F. Olney, John Snider, Leonard Soby, Orson Pratt, James Kelley, Sidney Knowlton, John P. Greene, John F. Weld, and their associates and successors are hereby constituted a body corporate and politic, by the name of the "Nauvoo Agricultural and Manufacturing Association," and by that name shall be capable of suing and being sued, pleading and being impleaded, answering and being answered in all courts and places, and may have a common seal, and may alter the same at pleasure.
Object of corporation
Sec. 2. The sole objects and purposes of said association shall be for the promotion of agriculture and husbandry in all its branches, and for the manufacture of flour, lumber and such other useful articles as are necessary for the ordinary purposes of life.
Capital stock
May hold real estate
Sec. 3. The capital stock of said association shall be one hundred thousand dollars, with the privilege of increasing it to the sum of three hundred thousand dollars, to be divided into shares of fifty dollars, which shall be considered personal property, and be assignable in such manner as the said corporation may by its by-laws provide; which capital stock shall be exclusively devoted to the objects and purposes set forth in the second section of this act, and to no other objects and purposes, and to the same end the said corporation shall have power to purchase, hold and convey real estate and other property to the amount of its capital.
By-laws
Sec. 4. Said corporation shall have power, by its trustees, or a majority of them present at any regularly called meeting, to make such by-laws for its own government, for the purpose of carrying out the objects of this association: Provided, The same are not repugnant to the laws and Constitution of this State or of the United States.

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Subscriptions
Sec. 5. Joseph Smith, Sidney Rigdon and William Law shall be commissioners to receive subscriptions for and distribute said capital stock for said corporation. Said commissioners, or a majority of them, shall within six months after the passage of this act, either by themselves or their duly appointed agents, open a subscription book for said stock, at such times and places as they shall appoint, and at the time of subscription for such stock, at least ten per cent. upon each share subscribed for shall be paid to said commissioners or their duly appointed agents, and the remainder of said stock, so subscribed for, shall be paid in such sums, and at such times as shall be provided for by the by-laws of said corporation.
Books may be re-opened
Sec. 6. In case the stock of said corporation shall not all be taken up within one year from the passage of this act, the duties of said commissioners shall cease, and the trustees of said corporation, or a quorum thereof, may thereafter receive subscriptions to said stock, from time to time, until the whole shall be subscribed.
Concerns of company
First trustees
Sec. 7. The stock, property and concerns of said corporation shall be managed by twenty trustees, who shall be stockholders of said corporation, any five of whom to be designated by a majority of the trustees, shall form a quorum for the transaction of all ordinary business of said corporation; the election of which trustees shall be annual. The first mentioned twenty persons, whose names are recited in the first section of this act, shall be the first trustees of said corporation, and shall hold their offices until the first Monday in September, A.D., one thousand eight hundred and forty-one, and until others shall be elected in their places.
Election of trustees
Proviso.
Vacancies how filled
Sec. 8. The trustees of said corporation for every subsequent year, shall be elected on the first Monday of September in each and every year, at such place as the trustees for the time being shall appoint, and of which election they shall give at least fifteen days previous notice by advertisement in some newspaper in or near the city of Nauvoo. At every election of trustees each stockholder shall be entitled to one vote on each share of stock owned by him: Provided, That no stockholder shall be entitled to more than twenty votes, and said stockholders may vote either in person or by proxy. The elections for trustees shall be conducted in such manner as shall be pointed out by the by-laws of said corporation; and whenever a vacancy shall happen by death, resignation or otherwise, among the trustees, the remaining trustees shall have power to fill such vacancy until the next general election for trustees.
Election of officers
Sec. 9. The trustees of said corporation, as soon as may be after their appointment or election under this act, shall proceed to elect out of their number a president, treasurer and secretary, who shall respectively hold their offices during one year, and until others shall be elected to fill their places,
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and whose duties shall be defined and prescribed by the by-laws of the corporation; and said trustees shall also appoint such agents and other persons as may be necessary to conduct the proper business, and accomplish the declared objects of said corporation, and shall likewise have power to fill any vacancy occasioned by the death, resignation or removal of any officer of said corporation.
Act deemed public
Sec. 10. This act shall be construed as a public act, and continue in force for the period of twenty years; and the trustees appointed under the provisions of this act shall hold their first meeting at the city of Nauvoo on the first Monday of April, A.D., one thousand eight hundred and forty-one.
Approved, February 27, 1841.
1On February 6, 1841, Sidney H. Little introduced SB 228 in the Senate, and the Senate referred the bill to the Committee on Incorporations. On February 8, the Committee on Incorporations reported the bill without amendment and recommended its passage. On February 10, the Senate passed the bill. On February 26, the House of Representatives passed the bill. On February 27, the Council of Revision approved the bill and the act became law.
Journal of the House of Representatives of the Twelfth General Assembly of the State of Illinois, Begun and Held in Springfield, November 23, 1840 (Springfield: William Walters, Public Printer, 1840), 487, 524 ; Journal of the Senate of the Twelfth General Assembly of the State of Illinois, Begun and Held in Springfield, November 23, 1840 (Springfield: William Walters, Public Printer, 1840), 384, 417, 429, 444.

Printed Document, 3 page(s), Laws of the State of Illinois, Passed by the Twelfth General Assembly (Springfield, IL: William Walters, 1841), 139-41, GA Session 12-2,